Are they going to show the Navy shoot down the satellite live?

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THINK OUTSIDE THE BOX.
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I'd like to see this. Anyone know what time they are gonna attempt this?
 

I GRIN WHEN I WIN
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iI DONT KNOW BUT THE WAY MY LUCK IS GOING LATELY I AM LAYING EVEN MONEY I GET HIT WITH THE DEBRIS:shocked:



FEBRUARY 15TH MIGHT BE THE BEST DAY IN MY POSTING CAREER THATS THE DAY (MIKE-JOURNEYMAN) GOT ME BANNED AT THE OTHER FORUM:toast:
 

Show me a good loser, and I'll show you a loser
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around 10pm tonight I believe. I was looking to see if there was coverage as well. I know they are shooting the missile from Hawaill. Pretty wild shit. Shooting a TV 14,000 mph to try and hit a minivan traveling 27,000 mph gotta see this.
 

Borracho y Loco
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WASHINGTON (CNN) -- U.S. Navy gunners in the Pacific were watching the sea and sky Wednesday, waiting for perfect conditions to take a kill shot on an errant satellite 150 miles above them.
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<!--endclickprintexclude--> They have just a 10-second window to fire, a Pentagon official said, and may not be able to take their shot on their first opportunity at 10:30 p.m. ET Wednesday (6:30 a.m. GMT Thursday).
"It's not enough to say 'no,' but we're watching the weather," the official told reporters at the Pentagon. "It's on the margin."
The cruiser USS Lake Erie will get one 10-second window each of the next nine or 10 days to fire an interceptor missile that will destroy the faltering spy satellite before it can tumble to Earth and -- possibly -- release a cloud of toxic gas.
The Pentagon said the window of opportunity to strike the 5,000-pound satellite opened Wednesday, when the space shuttle Atlantis landed in Florida. The Pentagon wanted to be sure the shuttle would not be struck by any debris from a destroyed satellite.
But the official said conditions have to be perfect, and that was not the case Wednesday with swells in the Pacific Ocean west of Hawaii running slightly higher than Navy would like.
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Watch how Navy plans to shoot down satellite »
CNN meteorologist Chad Myers said six- to eight-foot swells were reported in the area through Wednesday night and were not expected to come down until Friday or Saturday.
The United States plans to spend up to $60 million to try to destroy the satellite even though there is only a remote possibility the satellite could fall to Earth, survive re-entry and spew toxic gas in a populated area, said James Jeffrey, deputy national security adviser.
"The regret factor of not acting clearly outweighed the regret factor of acting," he said.
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Watch how the falling satellite could spark fears »
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<!--endclickprintexclude--> The Chinese military destroyed an aging weather satellite last year, prompting questions about whether the United States is merely flexing its muscle to show an economic and military rival that it can destroy satellites, too. Jeffrey denied that when a reporter asked him about it this week.
"This is all about trying to reduce the danger to human beings," he said.
In 1989, a U.S. fighter jet destroyed a U.S. satellite by firing a modified air-to-air missile into space from an altitude of 80,000 feet. That adds to evidence that the U.S. is acting Wednesday strictly to guard against the prospect of a potential disaster, said Gen. James Cartwright, vice-chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Without intervention, officials say, the satellite would fall to Earth on its own in early March. However, since it malfunctioned immediately after it was launched in December 2006, it has a full tank -- about 1,000 pounds -- of frozen, toxic hydrazine propellant.
Authorities said the fuel tank likely would survive re-entry and could disperse harmful or even potentially deadly fumes over an area the size of two football fields. Hydrazine is similar to chlorine or ammonia in that it affects the lungs and breathing tissue.
The goal is to strike the satellite in low orbit, just before it re-enters the Earth's atmosphere, at an altitude of about 150 miles. The missile will not carry a warhead. The idea is to blast the satellite apart on impact so that the hydrazine tank explodes.
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Watch Pentagon spokesman Jeff Morrell describe the launch window »
The smaller debris would be more likely to burn up in the atmosphere. Most of the debris would re-enter the atmosphere within hours of impact, NASA Administrator Michael Griffin has said.
The military has timed its shoot-down attempt so that resulting debris will tumble into the atmosphere and not interfere with other satellites, said Christina Rocca, a U.S. diplomat and expert on disarmament. Her comments were included in an online United Nations report on this month's Conference on Disarmament in Geneva, Switzerland.
The military also has timed its efforts to minimize the chances that debris will hit populated areas. But the United States is "prepared to offer assistance to governments to mitigate the consequences of any satellite debris impacts on their territory," according to a report of Rocca's remarks on the Web site of the Geneva office of the U.N.
If the satellite is not destroyed, she said, it is expected to make an "uncontrolled re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere" on or about March 6.
President Bush made the decision to shoot the satellite down after consulting with several government and military officials and aerospace experts, Jeffrey said earlier in February.
One Pentagon official said that since early January, a Navy team including 200 industry experts and scientists has been working furiously to modify the Aegis air-defense missile system so it could shoot down the satellite. Among the team's challenges was modifying the sensors designed to detect the heat from an incoming warhead, as the satellite will be much cooler.
The Lake Erie, an Aegis-equipped cruiser, will be joined in the Pacific by two destroyers, the USS Decatur and the USS Russell.
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See dangers and possible solutions to satellite problem »
The Lake Erie will fire the missile, while the Decatur will feed the trajectory to the Erie. The Russell will serve as the Decatur's backup, authorities have said.
The satellite and the missile will be heading toward each other at about 22,000 mph. The satellite is about the size of a school bus, authorities have said; the missile will be aimed at its fuel tank, which is about 3 or 4 feet long.
The missile would release a "kinetic kill vehicle," enabling it to "see" the satellite and adjust its course toward it if necessary, officials have said.
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<!--endclickprintexclude--> In January 2007, China used a land-based missile to destroy a 2,200-pound satellite that was orbiting 528 miles above the Earth. The impact left more than 100,000 pieces of debris orbiting the planet, NASA estimated -- 2,600 of them more than 4 inches across. The U.S. agency called the breakup of the Fengyun-C satellite the worst in history.
China, however, is among a host of countries who are monitoring the U.S. satellite kill shot. It is "highly concerned" and has expressed its reservations to the United States, according to a report in the state-run Xinhua news agency.<!--startclickprintexclude--> E-mail to a friend http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/space/02/20/satellite.shootdown/index.html
 

Borracho y Loco
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im actually surprised that there aren't any lines out there for this. reason being ppl will bet on anything these days.
 

Rx God
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I haven't looked too hard.

19:00 US catch Osama bin Laden while Bush is President

Will the US Capture bin Laden during Bush Presidency? Killing bin Laden counts as Yes.
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Wednesday, December 31, 2008 04:00 Which Country Will Land a Man on the Moon Next?

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  • China -152
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  • USA +110
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  • Anyone Else +2000
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Member
Handicapper
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cripes I could bet on that airplane conveyor belt thing and not this???
 

We didn't lose the game; we just ran out of time
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What are the odds of Chelsea Clinton to be President one day?

I would hold a future on her
 

New member
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Perhaps the Navy is ready to field test the rail gun.

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Here's the link in case my dumb ass hasn't figured out how to embed video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4OqlTXwLG40
 

Rx God
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They ain't gonna show it because they will miss the target.
 

PGA Professional
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around 10pm tonight I believe. I was looking to see if there was coverage as well. I know they are shooting the missile from Hawaill. Pretty wild shit. Shooting a TV 14,000 mph to try and hit a minivan traveling 27,000 mph gotta see this.

-165 they miss
+145 they hit
+3000 they miss and hit something else instead
 

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